The Quiet Picture

Finding my voice in the silence of nature

Jun 25

Options

Time to concentrate on the main thing – flowers. Considering the slow progress of all flowers in Loos, I figured there was a risk that I wouldn’t find anything interesting (read: orchids) in the mountains. And I was right, the best I could find all day was some lapland marsh orchids which were in the first stages of opening. I also visited Torkilstöten, which is a reknowned floral hotspot, but summer is always late there. Today, the coltsfoot were blooming at their best… and the mountain avens were barely even budding. Plenty of snow, though.

The mosquitos are turning out to be a real nuisance. This is why I’d prefer cooler weather – it’s easy to wear protective clothing, but in this heat, it’s only a choice between bad or worse. Grin and bear. The option is to stay at home and do nothing.

ÅnnfjälletThe afternoon hike took me to a lake in Anådalen, on the map it seemed like the lake would be a nice foreground to some mountains. Alas, it wasn’t at all like I had imagined, but now I know. One to check off the list. I did find something else nice though, ironically, just a few hundred meters from the road…

During my late evening session, I suddenly came across a pair of cranes, walking around in a marsh. It would be just perfect as a foreground for the mountain, so I took out the camera… and found that it was stuck on aperture 16. No matter what I did, take out the battery, memory card and lens, it refused to budge. The wheel itself was ok, I was able to use it to change other settings. But not aperture. Dang! The cranes are getting further and further away while I’m trying to figure it out… then it hits me. In the previous session I had assigned the focus point selection to the wheel, because I couldn’t make the joystick select the middle point. And by doing this, I seemed to have disabled the wheel for aperture, a very useful function – not! – who on earth needs that? At this point, I finally realised what had happened. It must’ve started as an accident – the focus point selection custom function was reset so that I couldn’t use the joystick to select the point like I’m used to. But I couldn’t remember which option it was in the menu, so I had to do some testing, but the testing was spoiled by a brain fart. I had forgotten that in order to select the centre point, you just press the joystick. And because I had been in desperate need of the centre point, I had gone for the next best thing which was the wheel, without realising the consequences. By the time I had all of this sorted out, with correct exposure settings and focus point, the cranes had moved away almost too far but it was still worth trying. Click… and huh? I still had mirror lock-up on!!

What did I learn from this? That accidents and brain farts will happen!

First the G10 and now the 40D… my EOS 3 is not giving me any trouble, I’m loving film at the moment…

4 comments

4 Comments so far

  1. Miika June 29th, 2009 9:19 am

    Ehh… Do you have a specific menu into which you can insert your own menu items in canons? While out I never ever touch any item but those I have placed into my own menu. Also, I have to admit, I may be missing something here but why would you use wheels to select focus point? Some other setting applied to joystick or HW failure? Sounds just too counter-intuitive to me.

    That said, not a bad picture here :)

  2. Minna June 29th, 2009 9:36 am

    Yes there is the personal menu and no I don’t have the focus point selection in there, I made the setting back when I got the camera and never had to change it since (until now). :D But now that I remember again that pressing the joystick selects the centre point, it’s all good. :D But I still don’t know how it got reset in the first place. Either by some freak accident, or maybe the Canon service reset everything. Except that I’ve had the camera for many weeks now since it came from the service and for sure I would’ve noticed it before this.

    And another thing – the crane picture, it turned out better than feared, now that I see it on this big monitor at home. But it would’ve been better had I taken the picture as I first intended, LOL!

  3. Rane Olsen June 29th, 2009 11:00 am

    Must have been a torturous moment… I like the picture very much.

  4. Miika June 29th, 2009 11:58 am

    Hehe, sounds just nice :D

    When I got my D700, I went to see Moose Peterson’s recommendations on the settings. I have not needed to regret that. They are more to the wildlife shooting side, but easy to quickly adapt to landscape specific and back :)

Leave a comment, or click here to return to the main page.